Today we'll be looking at British beers specifically brewed for the Belgian market. Nowadays it works the other way around. Sort of. With Belgian brewers brewing beers only available in the USA. These two phenomenon share one characteristic: though brewed in one country the beers were designed to suit the taste of drinkers elsewhere.
British beers for the Belgian market | ||||||||||
Year | Brewer | Beer | Style | package | Acidity | FG | OG | Colour | ABV | Atten-uation |
1922 | Allsopp | Extra Stout | Stout | bottled | 1014.7 | 1053.7 | 5.06 | 72.63% | ||
1922 | Barclay Perkins | Brown Stout | Stout | bottled | 1015.9 | 1065.9 | 6.52 | 75.87% | ||
1922 | Barclay Perkins | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 1000.4 | 1054.1 | 7.07 | 99.26% | ||
1922 | Bass | Imperial Stout | Stout | bottled | 1032.3 | 1092.7 | 7.85 | 65.16% | ||
1922 | Bass | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 1010.9 | 1055.1 | 5.76 | 80.22% | ||
1922 | Double Imperial Stout | Stout | bottled | 1014 | 1070.7 | 7.42 | 80.20% | |||
1922 | IPA | IPA | bottled | 1004.7 | 1055 | 6.60 | 91.45% | |||
1948 | Allsopp | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.08 | 1008.9 | 1052.8 | 5.73 | 83.14% | ||
1948 | Allsopp | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.07 | 1007.1 | 1052.6 | 18 | 5.95 | 86.50% | |
1949 | Watney | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.10 | 1015.5 | 1059.8 | 18 B | 5.76 | 74.08% |
1949 | Watney | Reids Stout | Stout | bottled | 0.09 | 1019.2 | 1072.4 | 1R+12B | 6.93 | 73.48% |
1950 | Benskins | ???? Ale | Strong Ale | bottled | 0.09 | 1011.3 | 1060.3 | 18 B | 6.40 | 81.26% |
1950 | Younger, Geo. | Gordon Highland Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.90 | 1031.1 | 1091.2 | 1 + 40 | 7.81 | 65.90% |
1950 | Younger, Geo. | Gordon Xmas Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.10 | 1032.3 | 1090.7 | 2 + 40 | 7.58 | 64.39% |
1952 | Younger, Geo. | Gordon Highland Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.08 | 1026.5 | 1081.8 | 2.5 + 40 | 7.19 | 67.60% |
1954 | John Smith | Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.06 | 1022.1 | 1072.6 | 95 | 6.56 | 69.56% |
1954 | Younger, Geo. | Gordon Highland Scotch | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.06 | 1028 | 1090.9 | 60 | 8.20 | 69.20% |
1955 | John Smith | Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.08 | 1022 | 1072.3 | 75 | 6.54 | 69.57% |
1955 | McEwan | Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.07 | 1020.2 | 1088.2 | 65 | 8.92 | 77.10% |
1955 | Truman | Scotch Ale | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.08 | 1025.6 | 1083.4 | 80 | 7.52 | 69.30% |
1955 | Younger, Geo. | Gordon Highland Scotch | Scotch Ale | bottled | 0.07 | 1029.9 | 1090.3 | 55 | 7.86 | 66.89% |
1957 | Taylor Walker | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.06 | 1011.2 | 1048.7 | 27 | 4.88 | 77.00% |
1960 | Bass, | Pale Ale (Blue Triangle) | Pale Ale | bottle | 0.04 | 1012.7 | 1061.1 | 17 | 6.32 | 79.21% |
1960 | John Smith | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.04 | 1013.7 | 1055.5 | 17 | 5.22 | 75.32% |
1965 | Bass, | Blue Label | Pale Ale | bottle | 0.04 | 1014 | 1068.8 | 18 | 7.17 | 79.65% |
1965 | John Smith | Pale Ale | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.05 | 1011.8 | 1056.1 | 13 | 5.54 | 78.97% |
1965 | Simonds | Martins PA | Pale Ale | bottled | 0.05 | 1019.7 | 1068 | 17 | 6.04 | 71.03% |
Source: Whitbread Gravity Book |
All this information comes from the Whitbread Gravity Book. Whitbread went to the trouble of buying samples of British export beers in Belgium. Why did they do that? Because they were selling beer in the Belgian market, too. And you know what's weird? There are still beers being sold under the Whitbread name in Belgium: Pale Ale and Stout.
On a forum recently someone asked why Scotch Ale was considered a Belgian style.And how come beer called Scotch Ale was brewed in Belgium. Surely it should be brewed in Scotland? As you can see from the table, much of the imported Scotch Ale wasn't brewed in Scotland either, but came from London or Tadcaster.
There's a odd feature of British export beers. Take a look at the gravities. They're much higher than similar beers for the domestic market. In fact, they're very similar to pre-WW I beers. Before 1914, the difference between export and domestic beers was just the level of hopping. After the war, when the gravities had been slashed at home, beers sent abroad remained at their old strength. These export beers give us a glimpse of what British brewing might have been, had the disaster of WW I never happened.
7 comments:
Could Scotch Ale be considered a modern version of Burton ale, where a number of brewery's out side of the original breweing area called there beers "Scotch Ale"
Its also interesting that duvel strains come from a heat resistant McEwan multi culture before clean up
Well, there are similarities between Burton and Edinburgh Ales. And breweries in both centres numbered their strong ales.
All of the breweries outside Scotland seem to have been brewing Scotch Ale just for the Belgian market.
Didn't Gordon's Scotch Ale come from William Younger/Scottish Brewers in Edinburgh, rather than George Younger in Alloa?
Barm, not according to the Gravity Book. They clearly differentiated between the Youngers, and the Gordon's is on the George Younger page.
I've seen a memoir in the SBA of ex-employees of M.Y. where it says "Prior to Gordons Scotch ales being made for Belgium after the relationship with Clark Doull McEwans had exported E/2B of 1088 gravity as Scotch Ale." This certainly suggests it was an M.Y. product. Oral reminiscences might not be reliable but I can't see them bringing up an Alloa product.
George Younger of Alloa was taken over by the "other side", Tennent Caledonian/Bass, in the consolidation of Scottish brewing, whereas the Gordon brand was certainly brewed by S&N in recent history before production shifted to Belgium. I don't think that brewers sold brands to each other back then as they do now, but that would be the only explanation for how a George Younger brand became an S&N one.
I'm fairly sure the Gravity Book is wrong here.
Other breweries in the Belgian market included Aitchisons, Bentleys, Calders, Charrington, Fremlins, Hope & Anchor, Huggins, Tennents & Youngs.
Gordon Highland Scotch was brewed by George Younger in Alloa. I can forward copy of neck labels if required.
Absolutely 100% correct, George Younger brewed a (Gordons) Scotch Ale and an Xmas Ale for Martins of Antwerp throughout he 1950s - Alexander Clark Doull was head brewer in Alloa from 1929 until retirement in the very early 1960s, a key player in the business relationship between the two companies.
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